Americana fans are furious about Cracker Barrel’s logo redesign, calling it “cold and sterile,” “soulless” and “woke.” On Tuesday, Cracker Barrel unveiled a new text-only, simplified logo, removing the figure of a man sitting on a wicker chair leaning against a wooden barrel.
Company rebrands are famous for going off the rails. However, in a hyperpolarized political environment, such redesigns have become akin to tossing Molotov cocktails into the nation’s heated culture wars.
“They Erased The White Guy”
“They erased the white guy,” said Benny Johnson to his 5.5 million YouTube subscribers.
On X, Congressman Byron Donalds noted that he gave his life to Christ in a Cracker Barrel parking lot. “No one asked for this woke rebrand,” he wrote. “It’s time to Make Cracker Barrel Great Again.”
“Cracker Barrel CEO Julie Masino should face charges for this crime against humanity,” stated the End Wokeness X account with its nearly four million followers.
The removal of a white folksy-looking man was immediately touted by conservative commentators as a systematic “woke” erasure of traditional American imagery.
Posting on X, Donald Trump Jr. was more concise: “WTF is wrong with @CrackerBarrel??!”
Cracker Barrel, which has dished up homestyle comfort food since 1969, responded, writing in a release: “Our values haven’t changed, and the heart and soul of Cracker Barrel haven’t changed.”
The Psychology Of Logo Loyalty
Outrage shared and amplified on social media can create intense moments of connection. Cultural change and demographic shifts are behind the angst, says Vann Graves, executive director at Brandcenter, at Virginia Commonwealth University.
In short, the redesign feels like a betrayal.
”It’s like part of their story is being erased,” he says. “That’s why this backlash is so visceral: a logo isn’t just a graphic, it’s emotional shorthand. Changing it unsettles people not only visually, but also emotionally and culturally.”
The Cracker Barrel Logo Told A Story
That sense of betrayal raises a key question: What happens when brands break their psychological contracts with their customers?
“The company’s value proposition is ‘time slows down here,’” says Linda Orr, Ph.D, head of Cleveland-based Orr Consulting, which helps brands strategize. “Rocking chairs, peg games, biscuits and a porch that feels like 1977 (maybe even 1877)” are integral to that story, she says. “The former logo worked because it compressed that entire story into one glance: a human figure at rest, a barrel warm country-store typography.”
When Logos Become “Trust Contracts”
Orr calls the Cracker Barrel logo a “ritual cue,” one that’s erased through the new crisp design. To many customers, the new logo feels de-personalized, she adds, which raises new worries: “If they changed the sign, did they change the recipe, the prices the vibe? Who are they now?”
Orr terms logos as “trust contracts.” Break them, she says, and backlash will follow. Coke learned the lesson with its disastrous 1985 launch of “New Coke,” a sweeter flavor formulated to trump Pepsi. Conversely, Pepsi can get away with logo changes because reinvention is part of its brand identity. It has what Orr terms a “kinetic identity” branding strategy.
Cracker Barrel’s logo strategy has long used what experts term a “continuity covenant.” The branding mark becomes a promise: you can count on us; nothing will ever change. The security and stability associated with such a strategy keep buyers coming back.
The old-timey Cracker Barrel logo undoubtedly required an update, says Jenn Szekely, president at Coley Porter Bell, a branding agency based in New York and London.
“The complexity of the old logo made it difficult for digital applications—it was created long before brands had to work seamlessly in small spaces and online,” she says. “But they oversimplified it, walking away from their heritage.”
Will Cracker Barrel Recover? Lessons From Past Rebrands
Every major company rebrand follows a similar pattern. After an initial backlash, the image can recover, as Tropicana’s did after it changed its packaging in 2009. Sales dropped 20%, and then rebounded. Gap’s 2010 logo switch lasted six days before the company brought back its blue box with GAP scripted in white serif.
Others View The Rebrand More Positively
“As a person of color, I see the new design as less culturally risky, given the undertones and associations the old imagery could evoke,” says Lanetra King, an associate at brand and marketing firm IndieKaterPR. “In that sense, the redesign is a step toward modernization and inclusivity.”